Cosmopolitan US May2020

(Elle) #1

Hon estly,


there are too


m any examples


to count.


But here’s one: The Thursday before Saint Patrick’s


Day, I walke d out of a work m e eting, lo oke d d ow n at


my phone, and saw 85—oh, wait, 92—new messages


in the group chat. My friends and I were about to


spend a weekend in Boston, and this was the unique


hell that is planning a girls’ trip (or dinne r or p ar t y


or br unc h or fit ne ss c lass) in 2020.


Whitney was wondering if we were


going out or staying in on Friday


night. Lilly was reminding us to


pack something green and also


being That Friend about happy-


ho u r pl a n s : “How p o or do we r e a l ly


want to be after drinking mediocre


mimosas?” Lindsey had the same


questions, except about dinner.


There were a lot of taco emoji.


When I got back to my desk,


I had I don’t even remember how


many 1:1 messages on Gchat. Lind-


sey was still asking about food (yes,


I ’l l g ra b s o me s n a c k s) and bus sched-


ules (yes, I’ll meet you at the station).


Lilly was seconding my complaints


about drama that shall remain


unnamed. Then an email with a


weekend itinerary rolled in...and


somehow already had three replies.


On Snapchat, two friends who


c o u ld n’t ma ke it we r e OMG so sad.


I sent a quick “Wish you both


c o u ld b e t he r e!! ” p o ut y-f a c e s e l f ie


before checking Instagram, where


Whitney had DM’d a picture of the


bar where we’d be hanging out on


Saint Paddy’s. I wrote the perfunc-


tory “Sooo excited!”


Some might call this exhausting.


For most of us, it’s just friendship.


My best guess is that it happened


somewhere between Sex and


the City and social media.


This idea that our friends aren’t


supposed to be just friends—they’re


also supposed to be our chosen


family, our perma wedding dates,


the on-call crew that hand-delivers


thoughts and prayers during every


Bad Bangs Crisis (a boyfriend could


never). This idea that if you can’t


always be there for your many BFFs,


you suck.


Look, I don’t want to be that bitch,


but I’m gonna go ahead and throw


some blame at all the IRL squads


first spawned by Carrie Bradshaw &


Co. Especially the aspirational ones


(ahem, Taylor Swift and friends).


Post after post after post of the


perfect group hang effectively


s hove d t he ide a of “ h a p pi ly e ve r


a f t e r ” b ut ma ke it f r ie nd s h ip dow n


our throats.


Nothing reinforces what these


relationships should look like


more than all the “real people”


doing them on Insta. Friendspo


(see also: jealousy, envy, and gag


me) is everywhere, so insanely


photogenic and edited that the


images of our friendships have


come to feel more important than


the friendships themselves. Ask me


about the time my friends and I


120 Cosmopolitan May 2020


Look, we love
each other!

Cause of death:
my group chat.
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